Long-Term Care Home Performance in Ontario

These indicators provide data on wait times for admission to long-term care homes, the quality of resident care, and other measures of long-term care home performance in Ontario.

Wait Times for Long-Term Care Homes

Wait Times for Long-Term Care Homes

The median number of days people waited for admission into a long-term care home. A lower number is better. Median is the midpoint of days waited: Some people waited longer; some people waited shorter times

Long-Term Care Home Resident Care

Residents Not Living with Psychosis Who were Given Antipsychotic Medication

Percentage of long-term care home residents not living with psychosis who were given antipsychotic medication in the seven days before being assessed by a health care professional. A lower percentage is better. The provincial benchmark is 19%.

Long-Term Care Home Residents Who Fell

Long-Term Care Home Residents Who Were Physically Restrained

Percentage of long-term care home residents who were physically restrained every day in the seven days before being assessed by a health care professional. A lower percentage is better. The provincial benchmark is 3%.

Long-Term Care Home Residents with Pressure Ulcers

Percentage of long-term care home residents who had a new, or worsened, pressure ulcer (bed sore) since being assessed by a health care professional. A lower percentage is better. The provincial benchmark is 1%.

Long-Term Care Home Residents Experiencing Pain

Percentage of long-term care home residents who experienced moderate pain daily, or any severe pain, during the seven days before being assessed by a health care professional. A lower percentage is better.

Long-Term Care Home Residents with Worsened Symptoms of Depression

LONG-TERM CARE QUALITY INDICATOR DATA

Ontario has the largest, longest-running data collection and reporting system in Canada for quality of care information on long-term care homes. Take a look for yourself; download an Excel spreadsheet with long-term care data.